[Corpus Christi Times
(Corpus Christi, TX), 21 Oct 1960: “Dr. and Mrs. William Ransom Hogan of New
Orleans have announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Mary Sue Ogg, to George Randolph Farenthold.Miss Ogg is the
daughter of the late Thomas Alonzo Ogg Jr. of
Houston.Mr. Farenthold
is the son of Mrs. Hayden Wilson Head and George Edward Farenthold
and is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Morgan, all of Corpus Christi…”]

[Corpus Christi
Caller-Times (Corpus Christi, TX), 20 Nov 1960: “…Miss Mary Sue Ogg became the bride of George Randolph Farenthold.The wedding took place Saturday evening…in
New Orleans….The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. William Ransom Hogan of
New Orleans and the late Thomas Alonzo Ogg Jr. of
Houston.The groom is the son of Mrs.
Hayden Wilson Head and George Edward Farenthold of
Corpus Christi…”]

[San Antonio Express
(San Antonio, TX), 15 Apr 1936: “Corpus Christi, Tex., April 14….in the First
Presbyterian Church of this city, Miss Annie Blake Morgan, only daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Randolph Morgan, became the bride of George Edward Farenthold,
son of Mr.[sic] Emily Farenthold-Chevalier of the
Chateau-de-la-Garde de Bort
Auvergne near Paris, France…”]

[Corpus Christi
Caller-Times, 8 Oct 1950: “Miss Frances Tarlton…and
George Edward Farenthold…were married Friday….Mr. Farenthold, the son of Fritz Joseph Farenthold
of Brussels, Belgium, and the late Mrs. Emily Chevalier…”]

[Texas Monthly,
April 1992, p. 164: “…George Edward Farenthold,
a…Belgian who had received his U.S. citizenship in 1940 and subsequently became
a decorated Air Force captain.The
great-grandson of a prosperous inventor, George was a man accustomed to high
living, which included making a home in what is now the official residence of the
president of Algeria, getting his education in a Swiss academy, and enjoying
the company of a manservant wherever he traveled.His first marriage to a Texas woman had been
a bust, ending in 1948, but not before George had availed himself of his
wealthy father-in-law’s business knowledge…”]

[obit at http://www.caller2.com/2000/april/04/funeralstext.html:
“George Edward Farenthold, 84, a long time resident
of Corpus Christi, passed away on Sunday, April 2, 2000 at Holmgreen
Care Center….He was born on December 6, 1915 in Brussels, Belgium, was educated
at Le Rosey preparatory school in Switzerland and
moved to the United States in 1936.He
served in the United States Army Air Force in World War II in Europe, Italy and
North Africa, also served as an aide to General George Beverly and was awared the Bronze Star.He was discharged in 1945 with the rank of Captain….He was preceded in
death by his three sons, George Randolph, Vincent Bluntzer
and James Dougherty…”]

[A Memorial and
Biographical History of Johnson and Hill Counties, Texas… (Chicago, 1892),
pp. 468-469: “John L. Cleveland, a merchant of Cleburne, was born in Stewart
county, Georgia, in 1851, a son of James Monroe and Kate (Wright) Cleveland,
natives of South Carolina.The parents
were married in their native state in 1840, and afterward settled in Georgia,
where they still reside….John L. Cleveland, our subject, received an agricultural
course of studies at the State University of Georgia, at Athens; he also
graduated, in 1875, at Eastman’s Business College, Poughkeepsie, New York,
after which he taught school two years in Georgia.In 1877 he came to Texas….Mr. Cleveland was married
in Hill county, in 1884, to Miss Annie Upshaw, a daughter of Captain S. C. and Atelia (Aldridge) Upshaw.The father is a native of Arkansas, a pioneer of Texas, and a prominent
citizen of Hill county.Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland have five children: Carmelite
A…”]

[A Memorial and
Biographical History of Johnson and Hill Counties, Texas… (Chicago, 1892),
pp. 473-475: “Captain Samuel Crockett Upshaw, counselor at law….was born in
Little Rock, Arkansas, January 31, 1840, a son of Colonel A. M. M. Upshaw, a
native of Essex county, Virginia, who moved to Middle Tennessee when a young
man, from which State he volunteered in the Indian war of 1836, serving against
the Seminoles in Florida, after which he was appointed agent for the Chickasaws
by Van Buren and assisted in moving this tribe to the country it now
occupies.He remained agent in charge of
this tribe for ten years, until removed by Taylor in 1850, at which time he
came to Texas, settling in Washington county, which he
afterwards represented in the Texas Legislature two terms…citizen of the county
until his death, which occurred in 1877.His wife was Ann H. Crockett, a native of Williamson county,
Tennessee, but she is now a resident of Houston, Texas, and has reached the
advanced age of eighty-seven years.This
lady was his second wife and became the mother of the subject of this sketch….[Samuel Crockett Upshaw] finished his education in
Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tennessee from which he graduated in April,
1861.He immediately entered the
Confederate army, enlisting in Company B, Seventeenth Mississippi Regiment,
being commissioned Second Lieutenant of his company on its organization, and
going at once to the front.He was in
the first engagement at Bull Run and served in the campaign of that date up to June,
when he resigned, returned to Texas and joined Waul’s
Legion, and was on General Waul’s staff up to the
siege of Vicksburg, where he was captured July 4, 1863.He was afterwards paroled and transferred to
the Trans-Mississippi Department, where he served until the close of the war as
Captain on the staffs of different commands…[practiced law in TX, served as
District Attorney for the 31st district in Navarro, Hill, and Bosque
counties; attorney in Hillsboro since 1874; served as state senator]…”]

124-125. continued at
addresses under #62 (including descents from Mayflower passengers George Soule, John Alden, Priscilla Mullins,
and William and Alice Mullins, and immigrant of possible royal descent Constant
Southworth)]